Presentation at a workshop for the
Rehabilitation Hospital on June 8, 2015 by Professor Omar Hasan Kasule Sr. MB
ChB (MUK). MPH (Harvard), DrPH (Harvard) Chairman of the Ethics Committee King
Fahad Medical City.
OBLIGATION TO TELL THE TRUTH
·
As part of the professional
contract between the physician and the patient, the physician must tell the
whole truth.
·
Veracity is based on
respect for autonomy, fidelity, and confidentiality.
·
Patients have the right to
know the risks and benefits of medical procedure in order for them to make an
autonomous informed consent.
·
Deception violates
fidelity.
WHAT IS DISCLOSED
·
Disclosure of some forms of
information may constitute malefacence.
·
There is no obligation to
disclose information that the patient does not request or does not want.
·
Some patients may prefer
not to know the truth.
·
There is no obligation to
disclose unwanted information.
·
Patients should be told
only what they need to know or what they want to know.
PARTIAL DISCLOSURE and WHITE
or TECHNICAL LIES
·
Partial disclosure can be
considered a half truth and therefore a form of lying.
·
Technical lies are
statements that are apparently true and whose truth can be defended using data
and reasoning but they contain an element of untruth that any person privy to
the whole information will be able to discern.
·
The physician may consider
telling ‘white lies’ for the sake of the patient welfare.
· The physician should be
guided in his communication by the background and understanding of a patient.
Some patients can be given a lot of information and they do not get disturbed.
Some types of information agitate patients. The prophet taught talking to each
person according to his ability to understand.
DISCLOSURES TO OTHERS ABOUT
THE PATIENT
·
It may be necessary that
the physician shares some confidential information with members of the family
in order to get involve them in patient care.
·
This may take the form of
getting more information about the patient, consultation about the best care or
trying to interpret and understand the patient’s choices and decisions.
·
In general divulging
unsolicited information to governmental or other authorities is frowned upon.
GIVING BAD NEWS 1
·
Bad news is common in
medicine. The patient may have to be told about a diagnostic result that
indicates a more serious disease than had been anticipated. The prognosis may
be bad or the treatment may fail.
·
In general it is better to
keep quiet than to pronounce anything that is uncomfortable. However the
obligation of veracity and transparency force the physician to give bad news to
the patient and the family.
·
Telling the patient half
truths or white technical lies may be a way out of the dilemma of giving bad
news but it destroys the confidence and trust that patients put in doctors.
·
Telling a straight lie is
forbidden.
·
Each case should be
evaluated on its own merits by balancing benefits and injuries. In the end it
may be better to be straight in dealing with the patient and warn them before
giving bad news. Their permission could also be asked. Some may prefer that
they be not told the whole truth because that would distress and disturb them.
GIVING BAD NEWS 1
·
Some bad news is better
given to the relatives. They can find a way of conveying the information in a
gentler way that minimizes the mental injury to the patient. They may also make
a better judgment of what to tell and what not to tell the patient.
·
Some bad news may be given
to authorities in the form of medical certification for temporary or permanent
disability, sick leave, and return to work.
GIVING BAD NEWS 2
·
Physicians should be
careful about their body language. It is very difficult to hide feelings
inside. The patient will read the body language and will believe it more than verbal
language.
·
A verbal reassurance of the
patient that he will so well can be contradicted by show of worry and agitation
on the face of the physician.
·
This is perhaps one
argument for telling the whole truth to the patient whatever the consequence because
they can read it for themselves from the physician’s body language.